The New York Herald Newspaper, February 9, 1869, Page 4

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4 EUROPE. Earl Russell’s Letter on the State of Ireland. Conclusion of the Overend & Gurney Trial. Mr. Burlingame’s Address to the Emperor Napoleon. THE SPANISH ELECTIONS. The Hamburg steamship America, Captain Har- geshelmer, from Bremen 234, and Southampton 26th ultimo, and the Inman steamer City of Paris, Captain Kenneay, from /.tverpool 27th, via Queenstown 28th ultimo, arrived here yesterday. They oring mails and details of telegrams up to January 28. ‘Tne Turkish government has purchased the British steamer St. Lawrence for £28,000, The ship is in- tended for the transport of troops. ‘The Portuguese Chamber ofjDeputies has been dis- solved by Royal decree, and the new Cortes are sum- moned for the 4ti of May. In the sitting of the French Legislative body of the 26th ultimo, M. Bucet gave notice that he would ask the government for explanations respecting iw policy at home; and M. Paul Bethmont gave @ similar notice relative to the interial situation of France, A correspondent mentions that henceforward there will not be two aitar lights during the celebration of the Sacrament at St. Alban’s, Holborn, London, but that seven pendant lamps will be kept constantly burning before the altar. At the opening of the Legislative Chambers in Paris, the procession was attentively watched by ex- Queen Isabella from her present abode. It was re- marked that she wore @ Jook of deep melancholy, doubtless caused by former recollections. he total cost of the Prussian war of 1866, as verified by the Kerlin Court of Accounts, amounts to 160,830,714 thalers (three francs seventy-five centimes each), and of which 729,096 were for secret political purposes. A visible proof of the toleration established under the new order of things was given on the 24th ult. at Madrid, In that most Catholic of capitals a Pro- testant service was performed for the first time in public, Tue Grand Councli of the canton of Arragan in Switzeriand has just decided, by 160 votes to 101, that, in order to adinit the nation to participate in a direct manner in the government, all laws, treaties, joans, and extraordinary expenditure of sums ex- ceeding 250,000f., should be submitted twice a year to the sanction of the popular vote. The suspension is announced, gy circular, of Messrs. M’Guard, Wand & Co., stuff merchants, of Bradford, England. The depression of trade is said to have caused the fatiure. The liquidation will probably prove favorable. The London directors of the Italian Irrigation Company (Cavour Cana) announce that the neves- sary funds have now been remitted to enable them to pay the coupons of the bonds due on the 1st tust., but that the other coupons now In arrear will have to be capitalized in terms of the concordat whereby the concern has been taken out of bankruptcy. We have now afew particulars of the assassina- tion of the Governor of Burgos, which was an- nounced by telegraph. The dreadful act was perpe- trated inside the cathedrai, and an inspector of po- lice, who most probably ran to hia assistance, was also wounded. Upwards of fifty persons have been arrested on suspicion of complicity in the crime, and Burgos has been proclaimed in a state of siege. The Danish Folkething bas rejected a resolution to authorize the purchase of a large iron-clad abroad, and has decided that a vessel of that description shall be built instead in Denmark. Notice has been given of a motiondor the appointment of a commit- tee to inquire into tue conduct of the commandant at Alsen at the time of the surrender of that place to the Prussians. The Madrid Gazette publishes a decree of Figuerola ordering a payment to be made on account of five- @ixths of the sum a!lotted by the government for the purpose of assisting the railway companies tn Spain. Another decree has been issued authorizing the pab- lic authorities to receive Treasury bonds of the last Joan in payment of rents due to the State. A resolution moved by Sigfior Torrigiani, in the Italian Chamber of Deputies on the 2¢th ultimo, was afterwards adopted, requesting the government to institute an inquiry into the recent disturbances in the central provinces, and to propose such measures as they may consider most expedient under the cir- cumstances. The Minister of the Interior of the Danubian Prinetpalities has addressed @ circulgr to the Pre- fects enjoining them scrupulously to watch over the maintenance of oriier and to prevent any political agitation which might compromise the neutrality of ‘the country in the event of an armed conflict between Turkey and Greece, - A private letter from Pau mentions asa rumor, credited in society there, that the Marquis of Bute will shortly be admitted into the Romish priesthood, The report claims as authority Monsignore Capel, ‘Who recetved his lordship into the bosom of the Oburch. The Marquis is now at Rome. Upon hearing of the death of the Prince Royal of Beigioat she Emperor Napoieon at once sent a letter vo the King of the Belgians, in which he expressed, in bis own na‘Bé and that of the Empress, the deep- est sympathy wiwe ghe cruel loss the Belgian royal family has sustai t A report of Marshal Niel, nated the 29d wuit., has been addressed to the Emperor NSpoleon, proposing that measures shou! be taken radace facilities to re-enlisted non-commissioned oMcers to pass from the military into the civil service of the Stdtw The report has been approved by the Emperor. ~ A communication from Liverpool oa Saturday, the 23d uit., confirms the statement that the Hibernia’s Doats are stili missing. It was the captain of the sailing vessel Hibernia who, with his crew, was taken oo board the Cuthbverts, and afterwards, with the crew of the Cuchverts, on board the America. The captain arrived in Liverpool on Satarday from Payal. The London Express says:—The failure ts an- nounced of Messrs. Morgan, Melbourn & Company, merchants, with Habilities estimated at about £500,000. The firm, which has occupied @ very re- spectable position, was established about half a cehtury ago in Batavia, but the branch establishment bas not been in existence more than three or four years, ‘Tne creditorsare chiefly inthe East. The osses are stated tohave been principally im pro- duce. ENGLAND. Kart ussell on the State of Ireland. ‘The London Telegraph of the 27th ult. devotes nearly two columns to Earl Russell's jetter, from which we make the following extracts: — In hia third letter to the Rignt Hon. Chichester Fortescue, M. P., on the state of ir 4 ius sell premises that the ie of Eng are not *o well Informed of Irish atfa.rs as the eminent states man—a native of the sister couutry—whom he ad- dresses, and that “no pains ought to be omitied in placing beiore them ali the elements of the judgment which their representatives wiii have to pronounce.” Hie lordship further observes that the state of the uninformed mind in the counties of Engiand and the overheated passions of Protestants in the north of Ireland are alike out of date, as indeed ot were when the late Archbishop Whately spoke thn, in 1892, of the temper then existing:—"Here parcere subjects ‘9 unknown. They are never weary of tyrannizing over the conquered. The very name of Orangeman is @ siga, It is chosen on pu keep up the memory of @ civil war, whic! friend of humanity would wish to bury in obiivion. It is doing what among the heathens was reckoned §, Thos ot a certain date to be samed—eay March, 1870—the iE, NEW YURK HERALD, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1869.—TRIPLE SHEET, ve \ together, will have | touching their “piles,” and there to bo made TEE BURLINGAME MISSION. 4 Established Church of Ireland shall couse toeristasan Bs The reading of depositions oooupied from one to | sembly, which will shortiy come te Pet Bey Ww their diminiaved heads in eubdservieucy evieament one Delng had (0 ai personal falereste | quarter past three. M. Mr. Edwards oilloial a3 | to fIvi Spon I principles wie Geeetees | $0 tee iw. ft'was remarked by ‘one of the eauncta‘e! by the provisional government? If they | intemal revenue oifciais femmes, = S was | Am American Missionary View from a Chi- ent, regard H and to all individual rights of property. | signee of toe Court of Bankruptcy, on Sppeaning {a 2 That in the interval the means joudiy ‘ul The Lord had ois smmoi aco llr mus antag ea | Myoe ‘eing hh Gosia’ sad” fine | yin goto he pai of enon adennged page | 120 ccNAgs a eran vit mulioargomities | Rese Sinndnolnt—Tho Tent Lotentions of she eburcn 2 had come to cong tas | th tole: ry . | of dollars can be-properly collected from these frult- peror o! jaa in His Intercourse with 3. That to this free church should be assigned such cathe | cient evidence had been adduced lo justry | teat lt sorte tn asa — p parent revenue, and ‘that collected they wili Western Powers. no | was received with loud cneering by those | guished trom the reak of Byree. rea amen ond The Cincinnatt Journal and Messenger (Paptiat vi ern: present in cvurt, and aiso by the crowd in the court | more cautious guidance organ) contalas the following letter from Rev. Wli- afd Tae deeb lay Keule read long aaiewent | new comsutaiign than Unlet We PEt Mohs | are fabulous, amounting ten spar: Depth wlaioagy sf. Swiiow, boric deri Aefenaang tho ooadact of Overend, Gurney & Co., maak Air ae foe eo ar ie was | seven hundred dollars, merely on loan “ Eo i Partameat’ <a $s — por ie serena om, with pyre og ot Scored and feared to inake any ietiaacatte those | mense enumeration of one thousand taitllons of dol- gio ney gece “ — et pe De Ae o 8 aul y' /h transaction is much greater ly ejual in amount to that setatneg the who wielded @bsoluse power. The suppression of | lars. The amount ip eac! r the bighw: ‘of ‘capital picopal Church, be lesan he Pree #500 Oach. vor, addressing the six defendants, | convents and the seoularization of thelr property than the transaction (s for, as they are for 8} palnoe inset Dianeeye. 6 tae cacikel notion shail Hope cestenad te etal 4 es Rae case | asked if they had anything to say im answer to the | wore submitied Co in silence by those w! PRrpoeee cee tentte or hy be are nob Prad are festooned with yellow. Evea the strocta churches a8 bare beep shiely Dall, by | him in committing ali the defendants for trial, ‘The t6 be dened by Parliament, to be administered with alamay the overtbrow Oo! 9p it the Preabyterians bj eae ee of Ireland, ¥ Asse! ‘iscont back. re sprinkled with saffron colored send, so that the sale ierean of ths Loria Gearhable Tbequesta, already setts B Gurnes My lord, om bonait of myselt, | raced throus, OR, 8 vage, “he. lesitiuist oF | have been to rerait money Dock ooo iu the Gold Room | so-stylod ‘son of Heaven” sees nothing but the aaa ry tof Poniaaeal wih numbers chlargedeaey | Of, NE. Eduund Gurmey and ry iniecsat of any fa- | uitramontae member has a right tospeak. His po- | transuctions of one day, while the full amount of | Import ttnoN. | avg rorty thousand dollars & faa fun tobe go applied Spal be derived Sam 5 tention to defraud, a8 will ve provea wuen a full ex- | Bre eens omaha thunk with srg Feit, 000 60 io, 000,000 cy shat day. ee year tor acting Envoy Extraordinary to Western pe plied ine re year ny hall foaied yl nat ea may. SM answer and that of the | party fs not long in forming. We must expect Such is the atate of the case in reference to the | nations 28 bebatt CH oe om oe Basi spppces ot vary eoongding tod aio of moriaity Amodglabexiting | other tro. aefeudanca, ls “already sworn in ine See eT ae a eee atone ut of ror er ike peasensy Natwhon. tatters come to taf vuncement of Western civilization. ‘He 1s to work ciergy of the Bstablished Church. Court of Cnaucery. 1 bad poiaing to do with the | Cortes. tin ne y by Mr. Webs e other | for the mulatenance of the existing state of things i. the and repair of Presbyterian and Rom: ing of the prospectus, 1 knew | the monarchical majority we know not how many | be investigated ublicly by Mr. Webster som: in Calboi yaad di Preparation or issuing BrOKROC! 4 order of things, elopments atill more interesting character | in China. He 13 to work toprevent any more inno- Fermirecrgm pete se acne ahi | Au, Pre tg ie mpgs | Heat ine mew opnanyTosre nou Cal | Are promised te Puc ” raga iad Wve ope ae, . been tate rin tntalerance in the mass of the people to give a 8 ‘That remainder of the funds to be derived from the rity ore taken and hed eceggarben x aty party considerable weight and to ne all the nee ers | The Late Raid on the Distilleries—Close of o on pak of a kat on mot vo say ie i 4 disendowment of the present Estavlished Church shall be | snares iu a concern which | knew to ve periecuy and Influence of the new leaders, These will need These Establishinents in the Clty. % ngs iy ea forty thousand dollar applied by Paritament, from time to Ume, Cary by Irish pur- ten. I solemuly aitirm that I joined the company | pariiamentary skill and courage as well as find oy i ae the mageiacantinings Poses. That, with this view, the fund calied the trish Fut | 1! SON eae nuuest undertaring, | trative ability to maintain the constitutional course | The prosecution of comes in the United States | client. All this wit exp vt 4 see iereenedl ee iremad fon eral testa government faith and likely to be ‘of | they have proposed to themselves Fr ey — Courts of this city agains} defaulting distillers, the Pn oo Denanete. i pes Cannes Longe iy a : *4 1 rt, at its invel * Lord Russel! would “like to add to these heads a | ® very prodtable eer es large OD Mee lo tracneainus fieDda. condemnations and oonvictioda that followed rap- | ttle rest, and noble people. tt eae @ to onclecie deciaration that the present national system of ‘i Sw full | vestigauiou. f idly on each other, and the promptness with which | this vast mass of festering aod corruption, education in. Ireland, by which upwards of 900,000 | any Kenn othe € ads long printed document, the grand jurors, District Attorney Courtney, the | graveyards can be made to give out phosphorescence fe mautained.” iat that he ‘saya ia, Separate anit sid. ho fearissy aur Rust there was 6 | * SOUTH AMERICA: Judges ond the petit jurors met and disposed of | Hpccanens, represents the Chinese as jestion, and’ must be separately ‘discussed, ile | ¢Fliminal intention on the part of the directors., case put ontrial, have virtually closed these e8- | anxious to enter into the comity of nations. It dan only’express, his individual hope “that no men, | all was then accepted aud the proceedinys'cam® | American Affaire in Paraguay—Retura of the | fabignmenia From ihe courictign had io the | ip wih Tospect "to one “particular aim gure so fatal to the future peace and harmony of | ‘7,6 six defendants were not interfered with as | Kleet to Buenos Ayres—Positions of Lepex | Tlsdot fan SVK Ofte qivuiieries, and | natio Treading, upon thelr heels. | Western tem will ever be sanctioned liainent. It is | they departed, but Mr. Edwards, when ne made his | and the AlliesProbable Ending of the War. | several rectitying hi the business of running a vernment, of religion, of He tavorlieachome of those Who wish to disunise | appearance, Wwas followed turough the streets by BUENOS AYRES, Deo. 23, 1868. | Gtatillery, oF ‘rusaing of with the maverial manufac: | the relations between ruler and people, are. threat- been rap! declining till to-day wiren | ening the demolition of old notions and oid customs. tab jh ed mandarin desires Hi Great Britain and Ireland.” crowd of two or three hundred persons, yelllug and ‘The American fleet that went to Paraguay has | tured, has the whole of these est T hooting, aud he had to take reiuge in a cab. " The no cl of the ‘writers ine. best st course, as frappeara to nearly all returned, ‘There was left there the Kan- | paving closed. One of the causes added to that giv- | customs. He is impatient of innovation. fe." he says, “will be to respect life interests, asin | pne Qharge of Fraud Against the Late Di- | sas, at the service of the United States Minister, | en above (the action of the court) for this is that | back to his antiquated ideas, ating in the in- ba vo te Eman Coos gr min ea Cait mel rectors of the Merchants’ Company of | General McMahon, who remains at his post; and | with the price of whiskey & be Take 9 Ctl fener of” Se. ig fh carernliy futered aoe one, of them accord ng to tho samme rules” a London. though the government there is migratory, yet ho See ee ung re ead ap ate Voluntary act of | tno Litany, -*A8 it was it the beginaing, is now and His lordship then treats somewuat at large onthe | On January 26 Mr. R. 8, Lane, Mr. H. E.Chapman | takes his chance and for the present follows the | the proprietors Supervisor Dutcher might have | ever shall be, world without end.” land question, quoting from the rou” of gn and ur. i. F. Helbert, late directors in we Mer- | peregrinating fortunes of Lopez’s camp. The Wasp, | safoly aud legally ecized the Whole batch of them nl? b onser t0 Keep out, ts # sncnx of soroign ideas Lansduwie and afterwards. for the. estates of the rend eatin. ti one a ieee icnpleass flagship for the-occasion, the Pawnee and the Quin!- 5 Alea a: nara al 2 his junks, but they have gone down beiore the gun- Marquess of Bath and of Lord Digny® ‘fo the “firm- | to defraud, ‘The company was registered in Ucto- | baug have all come down. The Wasp bad on board BROOKLYN CITY boats, “He has collected iis gingalls and matehlocks, ness and the kindness, the liverality and the | per, 1805, and took over the business of Lane, Han- | the two young men, Porter C. Bliss and George F. . but they exchanged but one round wi courage, by which Mr. Trencu overcame Ribbon con- | Key & Co., in which the defendants were partuers. ny LG Meanwhile Western progress has made iteelf spirators and Leagan f tenants, converting the un- | ior that business, which was represened to be in a Mastermann, who were arrested by pez just as THE COURTS. felt and has gained airong {ooenela, son ponsecieg wholesome waste—whicl was scarcely cuitivaied by Condition, the company patd £82,500 as good | Minister Washburn was leaving Paraguay. They je ideas are stretching out t pe ong acne A Into the Farms of nea aay tere ii et doen, |W “ae dfendan, wo, baie elrodors, | were demanded by Mr. McMahon and were at once pe ph lesa Py r cen! Ln prosperity,” Lord Russell pays due tivate, | But’ See owerer, Wee f leces wicin twelve months | 8¥rrendered by Lopez. UNITED STATES COMMISSIONER'S COURT. on this emerzeney the wily mandarins ‘have aud- ne adds,” “it ig noc every Irish “ landiord | afer its formation, and Messrs. Lane, Chapman and | ‘They knew so muoh of Lopez's affairs and charao- denly discovered a glimmer of light, They have who as at mis command the means by | Helvert are now ciurged with having published @ | ter that he felt obliged to give tnem up, and yet | The Alleged Custom House Frand—The Exe | had translated Into their language iV Heaton 3 Laws which the the English abseniee, landlords, Lord speci ‘The evidence taken yesterday was of the Accused Parties Post. | of Natious, and they have discerned the advantage Lansdowne, Lord Bath and Lord Digby were cnabied | {alse prospects. | the evi ee ronal liquidator ap. | 2° throws a aisorealt upon them by acousing them of SL by of being reo ad as a member of the family at e r ten- 2 D Shane cons’ agai “4 civilized nations, Hap} 0) gain these ad- Ee er cn aaeaie wine ar areinage noel votion | Bolnted by the Court of Chancery to wind UP tie | rious offence against the laws of ths United States, Before Commissioner Jones. Vantages, and yet eccane making further concession of houses and repairing of fences. Yer, although the | Guy tue, aolendanta being aduitied to ball. te placed under arrest by | ‘The examination of Korn, Latdlaw, Theriot and | to tae demands of the age. Readers one Heaeribed eaumot be generally expected, tt is Pro- ‘tie testimony of witnesses ‘was taken, and the | Dickinson, onarged with perpetrating frands on the | | TOor4i"y Witernose. the United Sta.es as far a8 babie that more may be e:fected by the gradual con- FRANCE. confessions of the accused were written out, sworn | government by means of faise claims for drawback, possible as a barrier to English encroachment, and version of bad landiorda into good, and careless pro- and signed in presence of Lopez and .the United | was postponed until Friday next, at ten o'clock, at | also as a barrier to the progress of modern improve- rigtors into carefui managers, than can be done by htt oe cera res States Minister and other witnesses, When on | the request of the counsel for the defence. The ex- | ment; the latter of which the mandarins dislike aay sudden etfects of pen ‘Nevertieless, there | The Burlingame Mission in Paris=Official Ree | card Bliss stated at once that he had kiero pried of Wilson, which was set down Jor to- | almost as much as they do the iormer. are some amendments of the law which appear to coption at the Tuileries. Pega lrgenrntan mp tardy tpt meaty eget day, was also postponed to the same day and hour. | Any one who Will read the first, second and ninth him possibie; Ce ue thinks that it might with advan- {From the Paris Galignani, Jan. 25.) Rees eras bea mopeds escape from Paraguay cc articles ct ieee eee ae see ae gieged hoay ay map Ds Onaeee : cell Burlingame, the Chinese Am- 1 a s CITY couat. Lecanare: #4 1 Shah eepey Uoaason late dbianln! yenttytenanigy'thawd | sei PaOR OORT Me, BUTE EN Ne Gnioaliy tor Ane aEe Ce Ane Deanna julthinas vantage to the United tutes, the articles are really - * urn, as also concerned in a conspiracy oak an a(irmation, under the signature of W. H. Seward, bg ig law a Yearly (e0an°y ant might bring for- | celved yesterday, at two o'clock, by the Luperor. | agaimat Lopez's government. Mr. Washburn knew Attempt to Break a Will. of the Chinese side of certain diplomatic issues be- ward evidencuto show tae iniprovements he had made on his | His Majesty was attended by tue Marquis de la | of this before he left, and asserted that not a witncas Before Judge Thompson. tween the Emperor of China and England, or rather farm, aud the buildings which be had erecied at his own ex- | Vulette, Minister of Foreign Aifairs, the oilicers on | coud be found on the subject beyond the range of Daniel Morrtson vs. Catharine Dailey.—This was | between the Emperor of China and civilized nations pense. service and several dignitaries of the court. Mr. | Lopez's tortures. One thing is cerlain—a thorough ne le of lots in | tradiug in these Eastern seas, 8, That the Chairman of Quarter Sessions should be mathe Burlingame delivered the following address:— sifuing of all this will be made at Washington. - an action broug! 10 recover a coup! it was to guin decision of this kind, to be used rizod by law to accompany ie deoree by an awardcimpeloy sfay On bebalf of myself and my associates I havethe | The facility with which any charge can be made in | Hudson avenue, Brooklyn, irom the defendant, who | nereatter against Enziand, that all tuts expenditure prot ute Tnade and the buildings erected, or granting the | houor to present our letier of credeuce to your Majesty (rom Paraguay, and the low price of an affidavit when | neia'them by virtue of a will from the wife of plain- | of a foreign embassy Las been endured, in other tenant power equivaient to what is calied tenant Fialit of the Emperor of China, aud in ae formerly — good | Lopes wants one, will go far to throw doubt on any | ting prother, The woman executing this will re- | respects the treaty amounts to just nothing. Some seulng the good will of bis farm to auy other person. The | wishes for ihe healt ane bappuie™ great peopio cver whom | accur@ilou he might tnaxe, especially if under ihe | ceived the property by a will executed by her hus- | thingsiare said about toleration of religion, and about chairman might also I think, be employed to quash the e)eel- | Press, Sos Brince imperial and We fe ay smoke of tt some of his own little peccadilloes could | hand, ‘The plaintiff sought to break ums last will, on | cemeter.es; but these things had been secured by Mee eee canes taeda Ga lothe TL, whe minsion a-ncval ene, 1) le; the deat thas den ever | P OUnCORIOS. hae tne | te ground that the woman in whose behalf it was | previous treaties, made under the guns of foreizn 4. that any contract between landlord and tenant by which | hecnvens yy China to the uations of the West, Is iathe ex: fate advices to you gave the chief facts ofthe | mado was such atermagunt that her husband could | neets. In each article there 1s a stud ed balancing of the tenant agrees to give up hts hoiding on aay other terms | pression of a sincere desire on her part to enter into the les before Villeta ant e abandon! by no possibility have made it, and that it must have | favors asked and received, and there evems to be an than those in fore in the case of a lease or of a yeariy tea- | Tamntiy of nations, to submit her questions, as you submit | series of batteries. It was reported that Lopez had | been torged. exact equivalent rendered each time. Nothing can ‘ancy shail be utterly tliegal, and ipso fate void. your Soions i Seeenet, dodgm ont - maikind, and Po rdrige ag to Lugue, ae — oe ———- be more false. In proof jet me cite article four, Suppose that, by the end of the seasion of 1870, | to avail herse oer iatereauenal fain dente wae Kate CP PIS eace pet Benton, Me Shy ae ad COURT CALENDAS—THIS DAY. It is there provided that citizens of the United Lord Russell gays 1m conclusion, the Irish Church POnEER ae OE Oe ot ereciation of the, otviteation of | {ofee® 00 Angostura, abont @ league distant, where : States residing in China shall enjoy the same privi- and the irish land questions are, by the cousummate | {36 Weer faulting trom a contidorate policy established and | there 1 @ natural defence tn the width of the river | surreme Count—CrrouiT.—Nos, 87, 94. 114, 117, | leges, immunities, exempions, Xc. as shall be en- wisdom of Parliament, sat ctorily settied, is | maintained by the representatives of te treaty Fowers on | and nature of its banks. There will be a persistent | 419, 120, 121, 122, 123; 124, 125, 126, 127, 128, 129, 130, | joyed by subiccts of the moat favored nations, and everything accomplished? By no means. The great | coming into more immediate relations with the (ind men of | effort made to hold Angostura as it is the last de- | 431, 132, 13344. ‘reciprocaily Chinese subjects in the United states art of administration, as Napoleon justly called it, | theempire at Pekin. That policy was the substitution of | fensibie place on the river. If itis lost then Lopez , iid SESS shall enjoy the gamne privileges, {mmunities and ex- fair diplomatic action for the caprice ol interest and the rude | will retreat towards the interior of the country where me y ‘wiih firmness, with strict justice, with an authority promote that polloy than the enlightened representative of ‘There are daily encounters of various kinds near nnn The word “reciprocally” here seéms a piece of ing eituer intimidated or cajoied. It fajesty, M. vershemy, aud ft wana great consolation | Angostura, Tie allies will run up the United States c ‘ —_ - age . ‘There ig novhing reciprocal about tt. wiilbe along lime before ireland can iemenes Jour Majesty, M. Serhomuy) snow ‘thatCour views wore | flag and under it ran by or go very close up to re- | _ ATTEMPTING TO RESCUR A Sere eet eT eee eee ieutenitie citigedees Henerteoas fie in the slovenly manner in which the Internal govern- | warmly supported by your Majesty's government; and may | connoitre. Again the Puraguayans will cover up | Ving was arrested by officer Webster, of the Forty- | v0.00 nations” are allowed to go where they please, ment of England is now administered. Where the | Bot China ope that the same sense of justice .sppreci- | batteries with brush and old hides, and when an in- | eighth precinct, on Sunday night, for attempting to | and live where tiey please, and trade where they spirit of insurrection appears ina habit of murder- | Sed snd sussined those views in the ning wil attend 4 cantious steamer comes too near open @ fearful can- | rescue a prisoner from the custody of officer Teale. | piease, but in China citizens of the most favored na- tig. landlords, ‘agents and obnoxious tenants, tne | ‘em s they are carried forward into more enduring forms? | nonading, ‘The accused was held to answer. Pious are allowed to do no such thing. We are people of the discrict must be deprived of arms and | _ The Emperor was pleased to make a most gracious | On the day that the Wasp lay of Angostura the | pee iy WYTHE AVENUs.—Abont ten o'clock yes- | allowed to live at certain piaces only, and are special commissiOns of able judges must administer | reply. Mr. Burlingame then made @ sign to Mr. | Brazilians opened fire on the camp from the iron- allowed to go abroad beyond certain narrow limits to offenders speedy and stero justice. But let not | Brown, his secretary, and the latter advauced, | ciads, hurling their shells above and all around the | terday forenoon fire broke gut in the front base- | Sr" viien wo have a passport. the Imsh suppose that their portion of the | holding periumed case of yellow satin | Wasp. She dropped down the river. ment of the residence of Mr. William F. Smythe, 35 Yar as the Chinese wiah to preserve their “right United Kingdom is to be darkened by the permanent | Wed with ribbon of the same color, and The most dangerous enemies of the allies now are | wine avenue, E. D., and property to the amount of | of eminent domain,” we, as Americ: recognize dusence of ene rays of the royal presence, Let the | Which had figures of the dragon with five claws, the | theheat, mud, mosquitoes and camo vices. The sut- | WS)e was destroyed, The building was owned by | the justice of their position. So far as they wish to Frince of Wales appear in your country for two or | !wperial aruis of be jibe —_ ova ht pe ferings of the wounded are dreadful, ‘There are no | $h(9) yg & Brothers, There was no insurance on | exercise supremacy within their own territory and three months anauaily, with £25,000 a year added to | From this receptacle tue functionary proce: hospitals above Angostura and it is too danerons to | ty property destroyed. The fire, it 1s said, was | over thelr own people, we sympathize with them; draw out the credentials of the embassy, adccument | go by with wounded, and the road through the aati not’be olended waen 1 say that no Lord | Mearly six feet in length. It was written on thick fhaca is so miry that It is almost death to asound | caused by drying clothes becoming ignited. Pig orate Beng a Gel the narrowness, the prejudice and the stagua- Secrei yellow paper, with wide euging of emblemauc | ynute to go by it up or down, AcorENTs.—John O’Rielly, residing at No. 240 | NOs, sietieual; Que irish people. (p petmancit ces with tragnn Ther wext was in, Houixe column—ons | "ine postin, of things Yovtay ft this:—Marsbal | ayy atrect, while ene tron ot nix | Hon erthe Pash we cn have noayinpathy with them ] + ao ¥ le! ee “acl e - aera when the; reat wort of eonellleuon naa heen, doth running from rigit to left. In the middie was | ral Geily y Obes i8 at Palinas, about a league below. | Fesidence yesterday afternoon, fell to the pavement 1 te Barina me Gores ey eet eet ween. i per. in spite of unjust aspersions and unfounded calum- | Wie imperial seal, & square of about four inches, | Angostura, the hard nut, is between them, while the | #24 —, Lega aie owned by. | Hakt of tha weak agua tne Dasatea ne nies, gloriously accomplished, Mr. Gladstone may | Signitying “the Cag oe Me in ogee] rag allied squadron is abreast of the fort. Between Pal- ue Benjecin Alberton, pest Pogue on Firth Seana! 1s tomas cateri amanevena _ hw Sine seit the consolation of Dante, that his | Mautchou lettering. Tiils curious manuscript of mas and Angostura there are swatps impassable by yesterday afternoon and ran away. The vehicle | when he is found arraying tie prestige are, eat nto the future, far beyond tue mark to | Celestial Empire was banded over to the Marquis de ee ee ay oN) toate | struck a amp post at the corner of Fifth avonne and | nation against the attempt of another nation, t0 in: it 5 hile wi troduce railroads and telegraph, and other material Fourth street, and broke it down. The vehicle was in impebrectents ine - eanemen life trav ; cl la Vaiette. Spare SCENE OBS ws After the audience the ambassadors had the honor | petween them, and swamps offer him protection of being received by the Empress, surrounded by | from one assailed side, We are dally expecting news | Smashed to pieces. wee the ladies of ver household, Court carriages con- | ofan attack. Caxias’ assault wili be made under | ‘THe ANNUAL REPORT OF THE PARK CoMaMIssION- Be et aee ot oa that scot Almont = (my dolng—let me say, veyed the Eastern envoys to aud from the palace | great disadvantages. . xrs.—The annual report of the Park Commissioners th tative of advanced civilize. he fate of place, and the rough brake with all the ceremonial employed on such occasions. When the United States Minister, McMahon, landed = t of the ded in the con- he has gone back as the representative of That virtue mustgotbrouga, ane at Angosturs the Paraguayans fired a salute, and a | &ives an account AONAY CFREY pemrbarbarism. He came out to advocate progress; ce THE EASTERN QUESTION conveyance was sent for him to bring him at once to | structton and. maintenance of the several parks | 16 nas gone back to oppose progress, “3 The Overend, Gurney & Co. Conspiracy i Lopez’ quarters, where he was lughly honored. One | uring the past year. ‘The expenses of the improve- | So far as the Engilsh are concerned tn thelr doal- Suse niibvidente Cendinihed=Caammietal of the BRR RA of the men on board of the Wasp desired to enter the | ments made thus far are as follows:— ings with the Chinese there te mo doubt but they are = sagas gs: # jon and of the | Paraguayan service and the Admiral permitted him. 1665. 1863. 186%, 1868. | sometimes arbitrary. But so are the French, aud so Detendanis. The general impression here is that the war 16 | p, .+++6$1 7,780 $195,701 $973,903 $1,078,645 | are the Russians and so are the ‘Americans, too, On Saturday, January 23, Mr. Edward Watkin Ea- abont over. | If not to end soon by the exhaustion of | Washington... = — — ~ 1,831 "73,835 | whenever they advance to the frout and make any wards concluded the evidence he had begun on the {From the London Standard, Jan, 26.) Lopez, it may end by diplomacy. Lopez may at - 7 1,810 16,716 | headway on their own account, previous day. The witness, says the Pali Mall Gazette, Are the Greeks and their friends and supporters | Inst retire. Stories are toid, which are believed, of uit, a pwd 1,343 ‘But on the other hand, the Chinese man gave his testimony in an uncertain, hesitati man: | quite right in the disparaging estimate they vow hig shipping large apg se to Europe. re ae 558 '367 | rins have been Intolerant and t her, repeatedly contradicting himself, and pleading form of the Emperor Napoleon and of Francet Is it { _ Mayianc \aelt. Minister of Foreign Affairs in thie -_ pies 250 8,772 | oppressive to the last degree, and the Weakness of his memory. ‘The gist of his state- | quite ao certain a8 they profess to believe that the | repuitio has cone to the seat of war, and will per- — —— been determined that these 400,900,000 ments was as follows: He is an official assignee in Bum ‘will never pluck up resolution to go to war? | haps obtaln « dtplomaite talk with Lopez himself. ‘Total........$17,730 $195,701 $978,375 $1,179,681 ple be shut in from approach by oe Coes of Bankraptay. In 1869 he entered tne ser- | And are they a Bear aieemeres ie SPREE RM MENTE ‘The expenses for tne parade, éro mind during, 1983 ising turluences | Of | tie | rest of vice of Overend, Gurney & Co., at a salary of £5,000 a | bear with equani very siigi insu! ir are stated to have been for mec! , labore re @ few thousand man ins year. Mr. David Ward Chapman, then a patiner, | her because the writers in the opposition journals, INTERNAL REVENUE. teams, $6,088; for materials of construction, $2,460; ach for surveying, $182; se Who gave them authority to fen e off a ‘was the first person he knew connected with the | and the opposition speaker in the Corps alt, trees, $65. C: ay sends, and delygh —How Dine | The expenses of City Park are stated as—“Paid for | po tion of this habltable eart, and then say 4 firm, and he advanced his drst year’s salary in bank | receive them all so ht | Brokers and Bankers’ Cap’ notea as he received it to Mr. D. W. Chapman, b; rtray France to Frenciffgen as fallen irom her 7 ~ 5 laborers and repairs, $367. white-faved mortal siuli Wak cross it, even Wien whom the money had never been rei ‘an He ‘ons iff h estate ? Is it not moregprobable that the oppo- tiked Spirits are §eld—The Priccipal and For City Hall Park ie report merely states—“Paid | he is willing to pay for the water he drinks from the engaged by Overend, Gurney & Co. to advise them as | Sifion, by dwelling soomhy upon =the His Agents—Interestifg Faci«. laborers, horses and carts, $1,343."" itch by the roadside? So there 18 arbitrariness on to advances and generaliy to make hinself u in | faults committed in allo Prussia to | ‘here is a movement on foot to compel Wali street CARROLL PARK, both aides, only the arbitrariuess of the nglisn ts ‘The outlay on this little park for the year ts thos | more powerful than that of tue m:ndarins. Prerage Reg reaper a A er eeseecere | same, san by, steetion tees Oe pete nn tee to yleld a very large amount of taxation, provision them was dops afte? his oMice hours in bankruptcy | Many, and by attacking the Bi rej — if any upright mind is. calied aye to pass an that. was after four in the afternoon. He | principle of his government with so inuch girulence, | for which have been found very apparent on an ex- | Surveyors and assistants opinion simply upon some features of Englisa dip! watched various concerns which owed the | Will at lag; compel him to go to war? 108 | amination of the law. Assessor Webster was indis- | Materials of constructiol macy in the East he must at once deciare tiem to be that su from the na- ay one h “Taos m4 ture of things, [A wal be ae agin ‘of | posed yesterday, but it is expected that he will ve opty, he'Ra tnaad anton shiping Come | te Grea suppove tn in mac go event ey Wil | some rng facts ‘ned revlaign wil be rowan | Matt 0 rh be elbowed to msahe th some startling facts and revclat: 0 " mites Coe the Austrian ‘Dunk, Thomas’ Eogara, not mach rather as then tecus aceineden tree. forth which wili astonish the country> In the mreaa- itr croet ii acer Jonn Scott itusseli and C. J. Mare. He advwsed the | Hes which protected them will be torn up, and that | time the officers of the departinen¢ are making Total.........+ fs! totais with them. ‘They provided him with 09 | them de hauten onc. But the great war may not | sions of the various acts providing for revenue [rom | xo $40,223; ‘matersais, ‘&c., $12,336; pavements, | when itis between arbitrariness and arvicrariness, shares to become @ director of the Atiantic Royai | come. Is it the less dangerous for Greeve to | the use of capital and business of various aliarac- | §10,10 sarverare, ig Wend pipe, $1,203; | there is room for the exercise of choice, and we must 1p Eo, arbitrary and deservins of ceasure. But alter the ly collision once begun, and be is then asked which ants and shrubs. side he desires to see triumphant, he can answer but ipe and drainage one way. English ascendancy moans prosreas, ele- vation and enlargement, even to the Chinese them- selves, Mandarin supremacy meays oppression, ex- cisceceeseceeeeeess $16,716 | clustveness, stagnation and death, Mail Steamship Company. The company’s debt to | lave made, by 4 display of empty biuster, | o.- 1m wallstreet. manure, $401; stationery, $313; trees, &c., $207; | be allowed to express a preference tor the civilized Overend, Gurney & Co. increased While he was | an enemy of France? We continue to treat : "yee office furniture, $50. over the heathen form; for English arbitrariness watching it from £200,000 to £839,000. Heconducted | Rugland es out of the question, Has not TAR TAX ON DISTILLED SPIRITS AND TOBACCO. PROSPECR PARK. rather than Chinese, &@ negouation with Pearson on behalf of Overend, | France, in the jong ran, more power to help The present law in regard to the tax on distilled The account for the year ix qs follows:— When tie issue arises, ag it sometimes does, be- Gurney & Co., and Pearson made him a present of | oF to hurt Greece taan Kussiat Are Notoccasions | srinty and tobacco requires that certain parties | Smaries of Comptroller, Sitverintendont, tween French bigotry and Chinese intolerance, £2,000, He tad dealings with Stetavos Xenus for ihe | likely enough to arise in which the good will of the | §P “a ' ldwdxcape architects and engittee wesee $26,633 | one is relleved from all emberrassment, and jecis company, and Xenos gave him £500 ayear anda | French Government might be worth everything to | should keep books, such as the rectifier, the whole | gararias of surveyors, draughiame and as- much like Jotham in bis paraole, “Let dre cane out yacht, He was arbiter between Lascarid! and Lever, | Greece? And this good will is, it seems to be, de- | gaie liquor dealer and the compounder of liquors; GISTADIB 1, 0+ 001020 000e0s vee on seees 66,360 | from Abimelech and Uevour the men of Suechem and lo werd both indebied to the company, and his | stroyed, so faras the Greek government can doit, | put it doesnot prescribe that the broker shouid do | Laborers, Seepers, Mechanics, horses and the house of Milio; and let fire come out from the inmpression Was that neither gave him anything; but | to please Russia and Prussia, to gain the applause | go, section forty-six of this law also Unat it CAMBS. ... si vecscevece cs vee 675,889 | men of Shechem and the house of Millo and devour he wuld not like to swear it. He did not like to mob in Athens and the encouragement and | shat) not be lawful for any rectider of distilied spirits, | Maceriais of construction, tools hb.” By this { simply mean let oigoiry and swear itively to anything, he had such & bad ration of @ section of foreign politicians. We | compounder of spirits, liquor dealer, wholesale or MNS... 00.06 ee seseeeves 192,119 nce destroy each other. memory, iis mind was an entire blank on the sab- never conceaied our opinion that the Cobfer- | retail, to purchase or receive any quantity of disutled | Stationery, printing and drawing materials, 6,192 What do the Chinese propose to give to the United ject. in 143 be terminated his convection with the | ence was a great Jolly, and we bave expressed in | spirits greater than twenty gallons froi other than | Fitting up omices, rents and repairs . 2,860 tal jor giving their mu int a company. |. Birkbeck in rather coarse terms re- | strong terms our opinion of the ridiculons character | ap authorized rectifier or compounder of distilled | Trees. plants and shrubs... 19,987 ileges over and roached iim with having led the company into | of the resuite which it has achieved and of waich | spirits or,a wholesale liquor dealer. Manure and other fertilizer: ritish pres onses, and they would have no more | the govermments concerned afect to boast; but the THE AGENCY BROKER. Water pipe and hydrants. sure?’ Nove whatever, But itis promised we shall to do with Ju He immediately had an in- | folly of England, France and Austria in entering Into But the constant drag in the matter ts the “agency Drainage ph Pe loy “the privileges granted to the most favored terwiew with Jar. H. E. Gurney, and obtained a Conference to assert in a stumbling manner cer- | proker,” and tue operations of this individna’ may | peigiau aud other pavements.. nations.” ‘This means tuat nothig new will b @ fattering certi@caté pf character (rom him. At the | tatu truisms of international jaw would be trifling | be familiarly lilnstrated as foliows:—Fory same time £20,000 Wi wut to hh ecit. He drew | compared with that of Greece in indignantly deny- | here is a disiilier out West who ea AN arranze- Total. gunboats nid demand thas these gates be opened some £4,00u then, afte Qay rest a as the limited | ing the right of the great Powers to read her euch & | ment with aman in New York who tioldas license a bit wider, and we find ourselves compelied to company was formed. WW paid from the | lesson. as acommercial broker to sell his spirits for him, HORSE NOTES. yield, then we will make a virtue of necessity, and lumiied compas ty Mi Peri nae Me pon - ‘i pd Meg ae Hy Lg a aliow the Americans to come ta along wita them Une, In cross ON still au OMecia! as- Cretan Regard for Tarkish Concessions. the e piace of manufacture as not liable ‘, fT e and share the concesston. signee OF the C The following ietter appears in the Paris Scale of | $0 the wholesale liquor dealer's license. The tax on ‘The Nacregsaaes Bigherg poy bier foro You will ak me: Have not the magnates of New Ballavuine—You are qui the 26th ult.:— . the wholesale liquor deaier is one per cent, | Wii commence on the 220 of June and continue | yor, extolled the work of the Embassy’ And has been to your oifice to-day t ite while in making his returns thia agent } three days. not Mr. Seward made @ speech of congrataiation? ceded tous, But that if, hereafter, these Englis' geant Batianune—Any commin. cation from the Many persuns who sympathize with the saiferings of ™y | simply makes them, as a broker, one-twentieth per o And has not Dr. Homes wused till the ie fre ed Ohateoler Will cénen Jou tere? Witness | country, Crem, ave me whether we evid not, on | UN) Tagtead of one, he setting forth that he ls Phe ‘The inayguration meeting of the Prospect Park } And has not Dr. Hounes wused tl — i os - Meng ye authorized t, holding power of attorney, and | Fair Gronnd Associa tion will take place on the 26th, | that @ person named Phineas T. Barnum befovied 18 Closed the case for the prosem\tion, and Mr. | domitabie wi that be is really selling the distilier’s goode tor him | g7th and gorh of May. This a:sociation intend to | thousanua and tens of thousands of these same New Sergeant Ballantine addressed ihe bene," [oT Messrs, | though Greee ‘ainet by diplomacy, abandon us, never | through himeell. It is understood that the Commis. give $15,000 in purses of varlons amounts, some of Yorkers, making them believe that he bad in his ma- Gurney and Mr. Birbeck. He atirivuiea Me diaas- | will we again | jer hin yoke. The massacre of our oly sioner has heid that the wholesale liquor dealer, seum @ veritable “ woolly horse) At ou trous line of business in which the old fy." became | Gren, of our wiveeand of our aged men in cold Wood by he | holding @ license ax @ commercial Uroker as weil as | Which will be #0 large as to become inducements for | may be ready to aver sabe oes os Commueraeneoe i entangied to the influence of Mr. Edwara.': Wiose See ree eee es etree tae these crimes, | 8¢ ling for a distiller, when the requirements of the | the owners of the fastest horses in the country to | covered with sik and south-down; but by and by the connection with the firm was due to atra 'torous | » ‘ail the ronds of Crete the bones of our fathersscatiered | law siiail have been met, ahall not be labie (OA tax | iter inte competition for the spoils, while at the | Sk Will Wear off and you will Hee the scales sliining compact with Mr, D. W. Chapman, who rece: '€4 ® | by the Turks, dragged from tomb after two centuries of | as a wholesale liquor dealer. i ti 4 through. The missionaries are not done feeling is suiaty from the rm and at the same time | repose, do nck permit us to forges os eo BE A pe fd iene arenes Wr wat cee ie tee prominen claws, notwithstanding what Mr. Burlingaine says. oc keter rou the ent Ui v ew to tule a o of jot mad if Ea a te sales Of importers, that the Importer, when. the | fora lending racé—such & one as will bring Lady | jn‘ ust.be, repeated, (ner tn atone At is to ve ft oT reste vs tat led are sold excitsively by a | Thorn, Lucy, American Giri, Goldsmith Maid, Rhode in doe Sumer Gia Lato vo WD will ied them into all kinds of ruinous engay ® | 12,,Fermh to menis. When the danger was discovered Edwarh | | separave used his knowledge of the state of the Ori’: aime countryme ‘The ¢ has import ’ poker, pas nothing whatever to do with the sale of | Isiand, George Wilkes, George Palmer, Myron Perr; to deal In Bngiand, will have other lexicograph- being sold only by the broker, or, in | and some of the dark ones that we hear so m & & meaus Of @Xtracting £20,000 from them, Uailed states of America is connected. al Authorities for dedaing the word “Reciprociiy."” directors then knew, no doubt, that their capital i CONSTANTINE YOLONDARI, Rov been made by | talk about, to the starting. Ted Fs ts das he — | if he will say to the Chinese Bmbassy, “Give our was in a large measure locked up, but he denied | Pi “silent of the Provisions: Goveramant of Crete x! o cipal, and, consequent. | The winner to. reece no tnd Che forty Gorse | citizens the same privileges and the sawe protec that they knew they were hopelessiy insolvent. | & “ate, treat Motes dau 2, 1899 ly, the principal able fo. any to the gov- | $1,600, the thi howta’ boot three tn hus in® uu | im your empire which your subjects are alowed They had reasonable ground to hope that they could, | ?4\"" hs ; ernment. Powers of attorney are of a now creation | the race to be mil a poe three in five, in har: | under our vernment, in our land,” with fresh capital, extricate themselves from their under tie present law. hess, Another grand feature, and one which would reat dest toward, repairing the nuschiel done by difficulties, especiaily, be it remembered, as they SPAIN THR QUESTION OF CAPITAL—THE BANKS: add materially to 1 rest of the meeting, would nson Burlingame, were obuged to trust to Edwards for their informa. J The assessor and his able assistants, Mesars, Wads- | be races of two aD [iy a Pag] in harness. P. S.—The Chinese Recorder and Missionary tion as to various accounts. It was easy to reason car ~ worth and Lewis, having some days since entered | Aa the association a V4 a ral Ay pps why | Journal, published at Fanchan, just come to After the event, but at the time the limited company | mye w lsh Elections=Tho Rermation of | 90 the question of brokers’ capital and sifted it so | cannot It give a pa t Brassespten pF y Under the | hand, flere is an extract from the editor's remarks. an formed, the hopes of hie cliente were justilmbic, pan thoroughly that they will be able to make a proper | saddle, withthe view of wiping out old Datchman’s | | write them off, and beg that you will publish and, at any’ rate, tf they erred they Dacked their Parties. disposition of the matter and lay the whole syswem | record, which has stood as an eyesore to the owaers | tn the Journad and Messenger to show that I opition by risking every farthing tuey had in tie {From the London News, Jan. 25.) before the pubiic in afew ME to! in the meantime | of fast horses for the last twe yoann not carpin world. The Spanisn .e¥eP pers ‘state the resuit of the | turned their labors into an equally Important, if nota | The propenssst. r§ Ls) Riverside ane Park at we wish to express our utter diggust aa a For Mr. Barclay, Sergeant Parry urged that before | elections, ao far a. * ‘ascertained, and there | more important, channel—namely, the banks, many | Brighton, Masa., offers a $600 purse for four year Old | ogy a minesenthe of the afticien that come. tO this charge couid be established it must be sown | can be no doubt th. ™ country foe the time | of which, it is aliew ave perpetrated the most | trotiers, the race to come of on the 11th American papers B . bon \ favor of moni . The tee | astounding and stugendons chicanery tn refer The annual wrotting mectingof the Butlalo Park | Gne would tmagine, from ti caus taghs tae e aeons) pF By EN ‘gas known on Wednosday—| ence to their operations in Mregura to | Association wilt commence on the 10th of August hat £60,000 of his own money, for the purpose of de- | monarchists, 224; rep “iieans, 15; absolutiata, 16; | the go bank wuvemen, “ide, Banker, Jou exer Cini frauding’ the publte, and, aa turned out, not only | douvttul, 10: ‘Thus oke Rreet Point is setuied: Spain | say to these banking gentiemen, “Mr. Vanker, you of defraguing the public, bat himself aiso and his ‘nd constitutional, but still | are not paying on your capital; you are not own family. Mr, Gitard, Q. C., and Sergeant Sleigh that FeIMSINS BOW IF tO | Oe ae endr Wotan the benyne cave ts bebe ‘also addreseea the for Mr. Reunie and Mr. | fi ‘we confess much tn- | tion.” In otber words, the bankers have not vegua Gordon respectively. “The case was then adjourned | difference. A Montpens er or," /taliam prince will | to folll thelr dutics Until Wednesday, the 27th ait. probably make an equal. good m1, “%,0, 50810. nd tert, About half-past three o'clock in the afternoon of | ever he may be ke wi 4 Wednesday the Lord Mayor gave his decision in the | Serrano, and Tope case of Uverend, ort Co. Conmderabie ex. | promote and decor: citement prevailed both in the court and vicinity. | cerned with the cbas add and close on the ist day of April, be run on the iast day of the fail rules which may then exist, horves of the iate John Minor ten, will be sold at the farm at matters. One of quent Wall street milionaire bankers are to be sam- station, fan on the 11th inst. moned to the office of the Thirty-second Internal Kovenue district, there to be duly tnierrogated

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